27Musk plans largest-ever supercomputer for xAI startup

US businessman Elon Musk speaks to participants via video during the 8th Vivatech technology startups and innovation fair, at the Porte de Versailles exhibition centre in Paris, on May 23 this year. Photo: AFP

US businessman Elon Musk speaks to participants via video during the 8th Vivatech technology startups and innovation fair, at the Porte de Versailles exhibition centre in Paris, on May 23 this year. Photo: AFP

Published May 27, 2024

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Billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk has told investors he plans to build the largest-ever supercomputer, called the "Gigafactory of Compute", to support the development of his artificial intelligence startup xAI, an industry news outlet reported Saturday.

Musk wants the supercomputer – which will string together 100 000 Nvidia H100 chips – operational by the second half of 2025, and "will hold himself personally responsible for delivering it on time", according to media company The Information.

The planned supercomputer would be "at least four times the size of the biggest GPU clusters that exist today", such as those used by Meta to train its AI models, Musk was quoted as saying during a presentation to investors this month.

Since OpenAi's generative AI tool ChatGPT exploded on the scene in 2022, the technology has been an area of fierce competition between tech giants Microsoft and Google, as well as Meta and start-ups such as Anthropic and Stability AI.

Musk is one of the world’s few investors with pockets deep enough to compete with OpenAI, Google or Meta on AI.

xAI is developing a chatbot named Grok, which can access social media platform X, the former Twitter – which is also owned by Musk – in real time.

Musk co-founded OpenAI in 2015, but left in 2018, later saying he was uncomfortable with the profit-driven direction the company was taking under the stewardship of chief executive Sam Altman.

He filed a lawsuit against the company in March, accusing it of breaking its original non-profit mission to make AI research available to all.

OpenAI argues that Musk’s lawsuit, as well as his embrace of open source development, is little more than a case of sour grapes after leaving the company.

AFP